Subject: Re: delete?
From: Erik Naggum <clerik@naggum.no>
Date: 1998/01/24
Newsgroups: comp.lang.lisp
Message-ID: <3094662584086617@naggum.no>
* Greg Schohn
| could anybody explain to me why this code has problems deleting the first
| element of a list when it is selected ...
DELETE is like NREVERSE or SORT in that they all work through destructive
operations on (parts of) the argument value, but it is the value returned
from the function that has all the properties of the performed operation.
any prior access paths to the argument value will now hold a value that
is not useful unless you know _exactly_ what the function did. it's safe
to assume that you don't, since you had to ask. in many cases, it is not
even possible to know exactly what a function did since an implementation
is free to perform the function in any way that maintains the specified
invariants and results. e.g., DELETE on a list is likely to return the
first cons cell whose car is _not_ the item you want deleted. if you
think about it, you realize that it couldn't do anything else, because it
would have needed access to whatever contained the list as its value to
do that and only the caller has access to that since Lisp calls functions
with the computed _values_ of all arguments. you will therefore have to
assign the returned value back to the variable to get the desired effect
of deleting the first element. (isn't this in some FAQ already?)
#:Erik
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